The Indian Premier League's ten franchises are projected to reach a combined $15 billion valuation by 2032, according to internal league estimates shared with franchise owners this month. The league currently sits at $8.4 billion aggregate value, meaning the projection assumes roughly 6% compound annual growth over the next eight seasons. That rate tracks below cricket's recent spike but above the maturation curve of established European football properties.
The math starts with media. Star India and Viacom18 paid $6.2 billion for broadcast and digital rights covering 2023 through 2027, more than doubling the prior cycle. Per-match rights value jumped from $7.2 million to $15.1 million, which league executives attribute to streaming penetration in tier-two cities and sponsor demand for live inventory during April-May windows when nothing else competes. The next auction, expected in late 2026, sets the ceiling. If rights clear $9 billion for five years, franchise EBITDA multiples re-rate immediately.
Sponsorship load explains the rest. Title sponsor Tata Group pays $300 million over five years, replacing Vivo's prior $330 million deal that ended early for political reasons. Kit deals now average $18 million per franchise annually, up from $12 million in 2020. Mumbai Indians extended with Adidas through 2028 at $22 million per year, while Kolkata Knight Riders moved to Puma at $20 million. Those numbers still lag Premier League mid-table clubs by 40%, which franchise CFOs cite as proof of runway. Beverage, fintech, and automotive categories have added $180 million in central sponsorships since 2022, though crypto deals evaporated after regulatory warnings.
The valuation projection relies on franchise expansion staying paused. The league added Lucknow and Ahmedabad in 2022 for $940 million each, immediately resetting the floor. Any eleventh or twelfth franchise before 2030 would dilute match inventory per team and complicate scheduling, but it would also inject $2 billion+ in fresh capital and lift peer multiples through scarcity signaling. League officials privately favor holding at ten teams through the next rights cycle, then revisiting if the 2027 auction exceeds $8 billion.
Franchise owners are acting like the projection is conservative. Mukesh Ambani's Reliance, which owns Mumbai Indians, has hired Goldman Sachs to explore minority stake sales at a $1.3 billion valuation, 80% above the $720 million Houlihan Lokey assigned in 2023. Shah Rukh Khan's Red Chillies Entertainment is fielding inbound calls on Kolkata Knight Riders equity, though no mandate has been signed. Private equity has circled. CVC Capital and Silver Lake both ran diligence on Delhi Capitals in Q4 2024, according to three people familiar. The sticking point is governance: founding owners want economics partners, not board seats.
Comparisons to European football now surface in every franchise pitch deck. Manchester United's enterprise value sits near $6.5 billion after the Ratcliffe transaction, while IPL's Mumbai Indians are marked internally at $1.2 billion despite fewer than 20 matches per year versus United's 60+ fixtures. The gap is monetization density. United averages $11 million per match day in gate, hospitality, and concessions; Mumbai Indians clear $3 million. Stadium infrastructure limits upside, though Mumbai's new 70,000-capacity venue opening in 2027 is designed to triple premium inventory.
Kit deals remain underweight. The $18 million franchise average is less than half what mid-tier Premier League clubs earn, even though IPL matches deliver 400 million television impressions per game in India alone. Adidas pays Arsenal $75 million annually; it pays Mumbai Indians $22 million. Puma pays Manchester City $80 million; Kolkata gets $20 million. The delta reflects cricket's lower international merchandising base and India's lower average transaction value per fan, though both are closing faster than apparel companies modeled three years ago.
What to watch: the ICC's decision on expanding the T20 World Cup window, which directly affects franchise player availability during March-April. If the tournament shifts to even-year cycles starting 2026, IPL gains scheduling flexibility and can add 4-6 matches per season without compressing rest windows. Kit renewal cycles for Chennai Super Kings, Rajasthan Royals, and Punjab Kings all expire before March 2026, setting a new market clearing price. And the next central title sponsor auction, likely H2 2026, will test whether $400 million over five years is achievable now that Tata has validated the category at $300 million.
The $15 billion projection assumes no team relocates, no financial irregularities, and no regulatory changes to foreign player limits. It also assumes India's GDP grows 6-7% annually and that streaming subscriptions keep climbing in cities under 500,000 population. The league has hit its media-rights target twice in a row; franchise owners are betting it goes three-for-three.